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Friday, May 15, 2026

Machiavelli, his treatise Prince and more on POlitics !!!

 

The recent Tamil Nadu Assembly results were a Black Swan event with no party getting a clear mandate and with jigsaw combinations, Mr C Vijay has become the Chief Minister.  Whom would you call in the present political context – a Machiavelli !!  (and this post is on Machiavelli !!)

 


To those who claim to be Political analysts – do you know or remember AB Shetty, K Venkatasami Naidu, B Parameshwaran !!! – remember this logo ?

 

In the 1952 Madras State legislative assembly election, no single party obtained a simple majority to form an independent Government. C. Rajagopalachari (Rajaji) of the Indian National Congress became the Chief Minister after a series of re-alignments among various political parties and Independents. Rajaji had to resign  in 1954 after the heavy opposition and in  the ensuing leadership struggle, Kamaraj defeated Rajaji's chosen successor C. Subramaniam becoming  Chief Minister on 31 March 1954. 

In everyday political language, the reference “Machiavelli”  suggests a leader who prioritizes strategy, power, and results over morality. The term is often used critically, implying manipulation, opportunism, or ruthless deal-making. 

The great antagonist of virtù is fortuna, which we must understand as temporal instability—the flux and contingency of temporal events. In fact, love, as opposed to fear, falls under the rubric of fortune, because love is fortuitous, you cannot rely on it, it is not stable, it is treacherously shifty. Therefore it’s obviously better for a prince to be feared rather than loved, since fear is a constant emotion, which will remain true to itself no matter how much circumstances may shift. 

Why are we still reading this book called The Prince, which was written 500 years ago?  The Prince was not read by the person to whom it was dedicated, Lorenzo de Medici. If the truth be told, this strange little treatise for which Machiavelli is famous, or infamous, never aided—at least not in any systematic way—anyone in the actual business of governing. The most one can say about The Prince in this regard is that Kissinger and Nixon preferred it as their bedtime reading.

 


Later political thought also absorbed parts of his outlook on power, state survival, and practical judgment  Bitter and looking for work, Machiavelli did something surprising: he wrote The Prince around 1513 and dedicated it to Lorenzo de' Medici—the very man ruling the state that had just tortured him.  The man, hailed as -  “Galileo of Politics”  -   desparately  wanted to prove to the Medici that he understood power mechanics better than anyone else, hoping they would hire him back. Yet  Medici did not trust him and largely ignored the book. It was never published during his lifetime 

The man said :

          The people are often wiser than princes. He says the many can be more stable and more reliable than a single ruler.

          Corruption is a constant danger. He thinks states decay over time, so freedom and civic virtue need active defense.

          Rome is the model. He uses Roman history to show how laws, institutions, and citizen participation helped Rome grow powerful.

          Good laws and force both matter. Machiavelli does not believe politics runs on ideals alone; a republic must be able to defend itself and sometimes use extraordinary measures in crises.  

Niccolò di Bernardo dei Machiavelli (3 May 1469 – 21 June 1527) was a Florentine diplomat, author, philosopher, and historian who lived during the Italian Renaissance. He is best known for his political treatise The Prince (Il Principe), written around 1513 but not published until 1532, five years after his death.  He is  called the father of modern political philosophy and political science.  He is famous for analyzing politics as it really works, not as people wish it worked. His name became associated with hard-nosed political strategy, especially the idea that rulers may need to act ruthlessly in unstable times.   

Machiavelli’s thought centers on virtù—practical strength, skill, discipline, and the ability to shape events. He also stressed “effectual truth,” meaning political judgment should start from how people actually behave.  By quirk of fate, Niccolò Machiavelli’s life had a dramatic twist: he served Florence as a diplomat, then was falsely accused of conspiracy, tortured, and sent into exile. That setback is what helped push him to write The Prince, the book that made his name famous and controversial.   Machiavelli's success was short-lived. In August 1512, the Medici, backed by Pope Julius II, used Spanish troops to defeat the Florentines at Prato. In the wake of the siege, Piero Soderini resigned as Florentine head of state and fled into exile. The experience would, like Machiavelli's time in foreign courts and with the Borgia, heavily influence his political writings. The Florentine city-state and the republic were dissolved. Machiavelli was ordered to remain in Florence for a year, and to pay a surety of one thousand florins. He was falsely implicated in a conspiracy to remove the Medici family from power merely because his name was on a list of possible sympathizers.  Despite being subjected to torture  ("with the rope", in which the prisoner is hanged from his bound wrists from the back, forcing the arms to bear the body's weight and dislocating the shoulders), he denied involvement and was released after three weeks/


One of the most interesting episodes is that Machiavelli watched the brutal politics of Renaissance Italy up close, including Cesare Borgia’s ruthless actions. He studied those events so closely that they became the raw material for his political ideas about power, fear, loyalty, and survival. His reputation is often reduced to “the end justifies the means,” but the real story is more complicated: he was trying to understand how rulers actually behave, not how they should behave in an ideal world. That’s why his work still feels sharp today—because it reads like a field report on power under pressure.  

In a capsule, Machiavelli is interesting because he was a civil servant turned political thinker, and his most famous ideas were born from watching real political chaos, personal failure, and exile.

Interestingly, Shakespeare’s plays are filled with famous Machiavellian villains—Lady Macbeth, Iago, Edmund. Think of King Lear, for example. There are a number of characters in that play who have an explicitly Machiavellian cynicism about politics, who believe that politics is nothing but efficacy, the will to power, naked ambition, pragmatism devoid of ethical considerations. One such character is Edmund, the illegitimate son of Gloucester. Others are Lear’s two daughters Regan and Goneril. And the other is, of course, Cornwall, Regan’s husband.   

Machiavelli was brilliant, his treatise was far reaching, turning out to be relevant hundreds of years after it was written, yet he did not have a successful political career, or charming life !!   

As we conclude with the names Q at the start !!  :  K. Venkataswami Naidu ( 1896 – 1972) was an Indian lawyer and politician from Tamil Nadu, belonging to Indian National Congress. He served as the Mayor of Madras in the late 1930s. During 1952-54, he was the Minister for Religious Endowments and Registration of Madras State. 

Balasubramanian Parameswaran (1913- 1966)    was elected to the Tamil Nadu legislative assembly from Maduranthakam constituency as an Indian National Congress candidate in 1946, 1952, and 1962 elections. He was the grandson of Rettamalai Srinivasan, a pioneer in the Scheduled Caste movement. He was educated in  Presidency College, Madras.   During 1952–54, he was the mayor of Madras and in  Kamarajar cabinet,    he was the minister for Transport, Harijan Uplift, Hindu Religious Endowments, Registration and Prohibition.  Later he became a member  of the Rajya Sabha.  

Attavar Balakrishna Shetty (1883–1960), was Health Minister in the first Govt of Madras.  He was a philanthropist, entrepreneur and the founder of Vijaya Bank
 
Interesting !

Regards – S Sampathkumar
15.5.2026

Will CSK qualify !!

 

IPL 2026 is really hotting up – in the 59th match at Lucknow, CSK has real possibility of leaping into the top 4 – qualifying… .. Will Pigeon beat Squirrel and others ??

 


What a match yesterday – chasing 201 against PBKS – MI won dramatically.  After 15, in 30 balls it was improbable 72.  Chahal bowled a big over giving 20 runs, making it 52 off 24.  Azmatullah bowled a dream over shackling Rutherford and Will Jacks, giving only 2 runs, making it 50 of 3 overs.

 

Then Tilak VErma unleashed some big strokes hitting 22 runs of Marco Jansel – it was 28 from 2; Arshdeep bowled a decent over giving 13 and it was 15 off 6.  Xavier Barlett was laundered by Will Jacks and Tilak Verma, winning with a ball to spare !

 

14.5.2026

 

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Birds of a feather fight ! Stanford India Conference 2026

 

How often do you listen to debates especially political debates – often in TV channels, representatives of political parties shout, engage in verbal duels – which follows the happenings in Assemblies too.  Ideally peoples’ representatives are expected to maintain decorum, showcase their view points in a polished mature un-abrasive manner !! 

"Birds of a feather flock together" is a timeless English proverb meaning people with similar interests, traits, or values naturally group together.  The phrase draws from observing birds of the same species flying in flocks, first appearing metaphorically in ancient texts like the Book of Sirach around 180 BC. It evolved into a common idiom by the 16th century, highlighting homophily in human social behavior.

 


However life is different – I have often seen that birds fight even when food is available aplenty.  Crows chase Pigeons, Pigeons fight among themselves and fight Parrots.  Parakeets too  fight among themselves – this mainly due to territorial instincts, competition for resources, or hormonal changes during breeding seasons. 

Political debates turn into acrimony and cacophony during high-stakes election seasons or when polarization peaks over divisive issues like economic policies or leadership scandals. This often happens in  TV panels where rival parties prioritize one-upmanship over substantive discussion, leading to insults, slurs, abuses,  shouting matches, and disruptions. 

The "India vs. Bharat" debate at the Stanford India Conference 2026, held May 9-10 in San Francisco, featured a lively roundtable titled “India, That is Bharat: Growth, Governance and Identity.” Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, BJP MP Tejasvi Surya, and BJP Tamil Nadu chief K. Annamalai clashed on national identity, economic growth, federalism, and delimitation.

 


The discussion unpacked the constitutional phrase "India, that is Bharat," with BJP speakers embracing "Bharat" as a culturally rooted identity symbolizing Viksit Bharat (developed India) by 2047, while Tharoor cautioned against divisive renaming, stressing "India"'s global brand and historical continuity   

The Stanford India Conference 2026 convened innovators, policymakers, scholars, and students from India, the United States, and the global diaspora to tackle the challenges and opportunities shaping our century — from technology and sustainability to business, education, and policy. In his opening remarks at the Stanford India Conference 2026 – “India-US at the Crossroads” on May 10, Consul General Dr. K Srikar Reddy described the India-U.S. partnership as “one of the most consequential partnerships of the 21st century” at a time when the world is navigating AI disruption, geopolitical uncertainty, energy security challenges, and climate change. 

"We all love India, Indian civilization, Indian unity, the Indian idea, the Indian cricket team, whatever. But how we design that India politically is going to have far-reaching implications for how we get from here to..."  spoke Tharoor. 

There appears no  official reaction from Congress leadership to Shashi Tharoor's specific remarks.  Tharoor's unity quote—"We all love India, Indian civilization, Indian unity..."—aligns with his standard advocacy for diversity and consensus, unlikely to draw internal fire unlike his past Operation Sindoor comments.  Congress   distanced itself  from Tharoor before on national security (e.g., 2025 Pakistan strikes).  

BJP’s Tejasvi Surya delivered pointed arguments on delimitation, accountability, and growth during the Stanford India Conference 2026 roundtable.  On parliament size and voter accountability, he said : "It's a country of 140 cr people. You need a big parliament because I want to speak to my MP. I want to meet him. I want to know what he's working on and I want to hold him accountable which I'm not able to do with a 26 million electorate today.  Rejecting GSDP-based seats, he added: "Now how is how absurd is this? It's such a cyclical number. 6 months the GSDP is high. So you increase the number of seats. It's a bad monsooner. So increase the number, decrease the number of seats for next year. These are the illogical arguments put forth by the opposition." "Maintain the proportion as it exists today. 50% increase flat for every state. Constituencies will be made smaller. Democracy will become more accountable." 

These came in response to Shashi Tharoor during Q&A on delimitation, emphasizing "one person, one vote" without north-south imbalance. Surya advocated urban reforms like public transport. 

Another emerging popular leader Sri K. Annamalai's contributions in the Stanford India Conference 2026 roundtable focused on governance, identity, delimitation, and Tamil Nadu politics, with verbatim excerpts from transcripts.  On philosophical agreement with Tharoor, he stated: "On this philosophical positioning of Shashi Gi there is nothing for us to disagree at all and this in fact has been the inherent cultural civilizational strength of this country. Uh the examples that you gave historically has always demonstrated the fundamental civilizational spirit of what we call Hindu Dharma." 

About Tamil Nadu politics, he was to say :  "Tamil Nadu is a black swan event it happens and it's a good thing that happened and   just like the startups here and a rupturing of the system has to happen at some point of time the system got overloaded too much and national parties were also not very   bold to go beyond Vhindias and and take the bull by its horn."  "Congress till now in Tamil Nadu which was pairing the DMK's language for last many many years one night they changed to Vijay one night overnight they changed and even chameleon will not change the colors that fast overnight within 24 hours they change the colors."  Annamalai praised Tharoor personally ("We all respect Sasha Guruji a kind of erudite scholar, while critiquing Congress tactics, urging urban reforms like directly elected mayors.   

Interesting !
 
Regards – S Sampathkumar
14.5.2026

leisure(eeeee)ly

 


height of vettithanam ! .. verithanam !!!  [ver "eee" thanam]

- can you read  the pattern on its wings !!